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power_94.pwr
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Text File
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1989-12-31
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8KB
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148 lines
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::: FOREWORD :::
I've just read this article and it's pretty boring and crap. Why don't you
exit it now and read something else? Eh?
::: OKAY, HERE WE GO... :::
This is the first issue of POWER in the year of 1995, but what was the year
of 1994 like for POWER disk magazine? Well, let's have a look...
It was in 1994 when POWER really started to grow. Issue 12 was the first
issue of 1994 released on January the first as a double disk issue. It
celebrated our first birthday. It was sold as POWERFIST licenceware at
first as were the rest of the issues up to issue 15. Soon after though
POWERFIST collapsed and they were re-released into the Public Domain. So
what were those issues like in my opinion? Well, they used the old shell by
Dattrax Software which was pretty slow and basic and the content of the
magazines were generally far-from-amazing. However, they provided a better
read than some of the other disk magazines I have encountered before and
quite a few people enjoyed them. It was issue 16 though when things really
started to happen. This was the first Shareware issue and boasted password
protected programs on disk that could only be accessed by registering and
getting the password. For many people POWER #16 was - and still is - the
best issue of POWER. Whether it was the sheer size of it, the amount of
articles, the content, the on-disk P.D. or something else I do not know but
even ST FORMAT gave that issue 80% (6 months after sending it in for
review!). It was from here when readership really started to grow and POWER
begun to get much bigger much quicker. Issue 17 wasn't too bad but wasn't
brilliant. It brought interviews with people such as Vic Wright from ST
HANDBOOK, Richard Karsmarkers from ST NEWS and Kev Davis of ORGANISED CHAOS
and I think it was these big-name interviews that helped the issue to
survive. Issues 18 and 19 weren't too bad and were rather similar but
popular too. Issue 20 saw a new layout to the menu (but still with the same
shell) which was preferred to the original layout but the actual issue
wasn't too interesting. POWER #21 was roughly the same as POWER #20 and
by now the issues were looking smaller because unlike earlier issues, I had
cobbled together lots of smaller articles into one big one...
Then POWER #22 came along. This was an absolutely DREADFUL issue. In fact,
it was so dreadful that I almost never released it. I was just going to
leave it for that month and go straight on to POWER #23. Anyone who has
read POWER #22 will probably agree with me that it would have been better to
blank it and never release it, but it's too late now.
Well, so far it sounds as if every issue of POWER has been crap. The
problem is that with me working on POWER just about every single day at one
point or another I begin to get very bored of that particular issue and what
starts off looking as a good issue begins to seem to get worse as the
production progresses and I always get people writing to me asking why I
warned them that it wasn't a very good issue when they think it was
excellent.
Christmas then came along and thus a Christmas issue had to be produced.
That was issue 23. Issue 23 boasted a new shell from Martin Cubitt (the one
you're using now) which greatly improved on the original. It looks very
similar as you can see but it is much, much, much faster due to the use of
assembly instead of pure STOS and also has loads more functions with mono-
compatibility too. Apparently the content in POWER #23 was of a very
likeable standard too as many people wrote to me praising it to the ground
with many others linking it to POWER #16, which as I said earlier was a very
popular issue too.
For me, I'd say that POWER #23 is probably the best issue of POWER to date
but you may disagree.
A lot changed for POWER through 1994. Many of our original writers left the
ST scene, ran out of time for writing articles or simply stopped writing.
A lot of new writers came and took their places though and with the
readership constantly increasing from one issue to the next more and more
people started putting finger to keyboard and contributing in some way or
another. 1994 also saw the last double-disk issue (which was issue 12).
We've had three double-disk issues; Issue 5, issue 8 and issue 12. I have
now decided never to do a double-disk issue again unless the need really
arises or you strongly demand it. There is no REAL reason behind this apart
from the fact that it is just so much more messy and expensive and in each
case (issue 5, issue 8 and issue 12) there was no real reason for a double-
disk issue. I could have scraped through with just the one disk, so what
was the point?
Many columns and regulars bit the dust and many new ones appeared. Things
like the WEIRD CORNER and DIARY OF AN AMIGA came and went whilst regulars
such as NEWS became much more popular. For some reason the CHIT CHAT's
became very popular all of a sudden. After months and months of producing a
CHIT CHAT myself every month I never got any others to publish until Gary
'The Mad Dog' Simmons produced one. It must have given you all confidence
to write one of your own because there are usually quite a few CHIT CHAT'S
coming in every month. The popularity of the CHIT CHAT section quite
suprised me really because I always thought it was total rubbish and very
nearly got rid of it at one point.
Changes in POWER are always taking places but the two main changes in 1994
were in POWER #16 and POWER #23. In both cases I took a big long look at
POWER, examined the opinions sent in by the readers and went for a new
POWER. In POWER #23, with the new shell, I was going to change just about
everything. I put out special requests in the form of OPINION forms and the
POWER POLLS so I could see what kind of 'new' POWER would suit the most
people but when I sat down to work it all out, I found out that most of you
liked POWER how it was so I ended up making much fewer changes than I first
anticipated. Well, if it ain't broke, don't fix it!...I suppose.
1994 has been a good year for POWER, especially the later half. As I have
said, issue 16 was a big landmark for POWER and I think POWER #23 was
another. The increased popularity of the POWER disk magazine led to the
commercialisation of POWER P.D. and the birth of TOP BYTE SOFTWARE. Roll on
1995!